It’s — they’ll bring it up, and when they bring it up they will ask for repeal, repeal of all the things I said that help children, help young adults, help seniors, help men or women who may have prostate cancer, breast cancer, whatever it is, any precondition. And everybody will have lower rates, better quality care and better access. So that’s what they want to repeal, we’re happy to have that debate.

Well, not everybody. Tens of millions will still not have coverage even once Obamacare is in full swing, which is strange since the purported goal of the law was to cover the those very people. There is also an “out” built into the Affordable Care Act in the event they find it unaffordable:

This analysis suggests that the uninsured under Obamacare will be heavily low-income, even though many of those people will have access to subsidized health insurance. Still, some might not find it affordable, and the health care law does allow for an exemption from the individual mandate for those who cannot find affordable coverage (defined as insurance that costs less than 9.5 percent of an individual’s income).

Possibly the biggest failure of Obamacare is that it doesn’t provide those who can’t afford the Affordable Care with a cheap mini-plan that would at least cover their treatment for an accidental irony overdose.